bobbysamd
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Trib Flyers article and the hazards and politics of 141 self-examining authority
Here's a link to the American Flyers Chicago Tribune article. The article should be old hat to any instructor who has worked in a 141 school with self-examining authority.
The article was deja vu for me. Most anyone who has worked in a Part 141 school with self-examining authority will tell you that it is a can of worms. I worked in two schools that acquired it while I was there, ERAU-Prescott and FSI in Vero. I recall that schools must have an 80% pass rate or better with FAA examiners of its last X number of graduates to obtain self-examining authority.
The prestige and "advantages" of self-examining should be clear, which is why so many 141 schools seek it. And what they go through to get it! They take great pains to ensure that students are trained to the hilt and look for "easier" (or, in Riddle's case, fair - I am not kidding) DEs to send their students.
It gets worse once the school is granted self-examining authority because it can be lost if the 80% pass rate is not maintained. Take it from someone who indeed knows, having been a Riddle self-examining stage check pilot and an FSI pre-stage check pilot. Self-examining authority is riddled (sorry) with politics and manifold opportunities to compromise your integrity and airman certificates if you are a stage check pilot. Stage check pilots can be under great pressure to pass students, so, as alleged in the Trib article, a number of lesser-quality students get certificates. Or else, students who don't quite meet standards are not failed but their paperwork is held while they receive "remedial" training. All to prop up the pass rate.
All this is incorrect. A self-examining authority stage check is supposed to be just like an FAA practical. It is supposed to comprise a proper oral and flight test, to the same standards as in the PTS. If you fail, you fail, receive additional training, and are rechecked.
FSI instituted a pre-stage check program for its students. They would go to an experienced instructor for a mock stage check, which was supposed to be as tough as the real thing. Their strengths and weaknesses would be noted and they would be sent back for remedial training, if needed, before the "real" stage check. The pre-stage check was counted as an instructional period. I don't remember now, but I'm sure they were charged extra for it, unknowingly.
The bottom line is that training quality can suffer as a result of 141 self-examining authority. 141 self-examining authority is indeed a two-edged sword. We had a DE in Vero (who stood to lose business after FSI obtained self-examining authority) who expressed that fear. I did not like this man because he was eccentric, political and unfair, but he might have had a point. Or:
Designated pilot examiners who tested American Flyers students cooperated with the FAA investigation.
"All of us out here have been providing example after example to the FAA investigators," said an examiner who requested anonymity.
"We got into this because the quality of American Flyers applicants has been poor."
An axe to grind.
Here's a link to the American Flyers Chicago Tribune article. The article should be old hat to any instructor who has worked in a 141 school with self-examining authority.
The article was deja vu for me. Most anyone who has worked in a Part 141 school with self-examining authority will tell you that it is a can of worms. I worked in two schools that acquired it while I was there, ERAU-Prescott and FSI in Vero. I recall that schools must have an 80% pass rate or better with FAA examiners of its last X number of graduates to obtain self-examining authority.
The prestige and "advantages" of self-examining should be clear, which is why so many 141 schools seek it. And what they go through to get it! They take great pains to ensure that students are trained to the hilt and look for "easier" (or, in Riddle's case, fair - I am not kidding) DEs to send their students.
It gets worse once the school is granted self-examining authority because it can be lost if the 80% pass rate is not maintained. Take it from someone who indeed knows, having been a Riddle self-examining stage check pilot and an FSI pre-stage check pilot. Self-examining authority is riddled (sorry) with politics and manifold opportunities to compromise your integrity and airman certificates if you are a stage check pilot. Stage check pilots can be under great pressure to pass students, so, as alleged in the Trib article, a number of lesser-quality students get certificates. Or else, students who don't quite meet standards are not failed but their paperwork is held while they receive "remedial" training. All to prop up the pass rate.
All this is incorrect. A self-examining authority stage check is supposed to be just like an FAA practical. It is supposed to comprise a proper oral and flight test, to the same standards as in the PTS. If you fail, you fail, receive additional training, and are rechecked.
FSI instituted a pre-stage check program for its students. They would go to an experienced instructor for a mock stage check, which was supposed to be as tough as the real thing. Their strengths and weaknesses would be noted and they would be sent back for remedial training, if needed, before the "real" stage check. The pre-stage check was counted as an instructional period. I don't remember now, but I'm sure they were charged extra for it, unknowingly.
The bottom line is that training quality can suffer as a result of 141 self-examining authority. 141 self-examining authority is indeed a two-edged sword. We had a DE in Vero (who stood to lose business after FSI obtained self-examining authority) who expressed that fear. I did not like this man because he was eccentric, political and unfair, but he might have had a point. Or:
Designated pilot examiners who tested American Flyers students cooperated with the FAA investigation.
"All of us out here have been providing example after example to the FAA investigators," said an examiner who requested anonymity.
"We got into this because the quality of American Flyers applicants has been poor."
An axe to grind.
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